ResDance Series 5: Episode 6: Improvisation as a transdisciplinary practice for unstable times with Jo Pollitt
In this episode, Jo shares insight into her practice of improvisation across several performance, choreographic and scholarly platforms. Alongside sharing the processes and approaches employed in her research, she explores the theoretical frameworks that more widely inform her practice and ways of working with improvisation as method. Throughout the episode, Jo reflects upon her current research endeavours and emphasises the importance of conversation as a
means of making change.
Dr Jo Pollitt is an artist-scholar with the Centre for People, Place, and Planet, across both the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts and the School of Education at Edith Cowan University on Whadjuk Noongar Country. She is convenor of Dance Research Australia, co-founder of The Ediths, creative director of #FEAS Feminist Educators Against Sexism, co-director of BIG Kids Magazine, and author of ‘The dancer in your hands’. Jo's work is grounded in a practice of improvisation across multiple performance, choreographic and publishing platforms. Her current research is focussed on weather as a studio for grappling with feminist anticolonial relations with place.
https://www.forrestresearch.org.au/portfolio-item/dr-jo-pollitt/
Contact details
Email:
[email protected]
Web: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jo-pollitt/
Social media
Instagram: @pollittjoanna
Other resources
https://theediths.org/roundtable-series/
The Centre for People, Place, & Planet: https://www.ecu.edu.au/schools/science/research/strategic-centres/centre-for-people-place-and-planet/overview
https://feministeducatorsagainstsexism.com/
BIG Kids Magazine: https://bigkidsmagazine.com/
Published sources
The dancer in your hands: https://uwap.uwa.edu.au/products/the-dancer-in-your-hands
https://artgallery.wa.gov.au/learn/artist-activation/conversations-with-rain
https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9781003145615-6/choreographies-presence-jo-pollitt
The State of Dancingness: https://journals.colorado.edu/index.php/partake/article/view/419
She writes like she dances: Response and radical impermanence in writing as dancing https://intellectdiscover.com/content/journals/10.1386/chor.8.2.199_1
How to think (as) a body of water. A talk by Astrida Neimanis: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ASKL8EpDVXE
Throat by Ellen van Neervan: https://www.uqp.com.au/books/throat
Please share this episode with students, educators, practitioners, performers, and interdisciplinary researchers curious to learn more about dance research in
action.